Post on 04-Jul-2020
AN ENDURING RESOURCE OF WILDERNESS
WILDERNESS MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES
Chapter 7 – Principles of Wilderness Management (Dawson & Hendee 2009)
1. Manage wilderness as the most pristine extreme on the environmental modification spectrum.
2. Manage wilderness comprehensively, not as separate parts.
3. Manage wilderness, and sites within, following a concept of nondegradation*.
4. Manage human influences, a key to wilderness protection.
5. Manage wilderness biocentrically to produce human values and benefits.
6. Favor wilderness-dependent activities.
7. Guide wilderness management using written plans with specific area objectives.
8. Set carrying capacities as necessary to prevent unnatural change.
9. Focus management on threatened sites and damaging activities.
10. Apply only the minimum tools, regulations, or force to achieve wilderness area objectives.
11. Involve the public as a key to the success of wilderness management
12. Monitor wilderness conditions and experience opportunities to guide long-term stewardship.
13. Manage wilderness in relation to management of adjacent lands.
* The nondegradation concept calls for maintaining existing environmental conditions, if they equal or
exceed minimum standards, and for restoring conditions that are below minimum levels…The objective is
to prevent degradation of current naturalness and solitude in each wilderness and to restore
substandard naturalness and solitude to minimum levels, rather than letting all areas in the NWPS
deteriorate to a common minimum standard. (p.183)